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Thread: Luis Enrique Monroy-Bracamontes - California Death Row

  1. #11
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    Death Penalty Sought in California Deputy Killings

    By DON THOMPSON
    The Associated Press

    California prosecutors said Tuesday they will seek the death penalty for a Utah man charged with killing two deputies during an hourslong rampage that also left a motorist and another deputy wounded.

    Prosecutors in Placer and Sacramento counties decided after consulting with the victims' families that the death penalty is appropriate for defendant Luis Enrique Monroy Bracamontes, Placer County Supervising Deputy District Attorney David Tellman said.

    He did not elaborate on the decision during a brief court hearing.

    Bracamontes, who was shackled and handcuffed in court, did not comment as he was informed of the decision through a Spanish language interpreter. His attorneys and seven armed court bailiffs looked on.

    Assistant Public Defender Jeffrey Barbour declined comment, saying he and fellow defense attorney Norm Dawson were still in the process of reviewing information.

    Bracamontes, who was booked into jail under the name Marcelo Marquez and whose name previously was spelled Bracamonte by federal immigration officials, was also charged Tuesday with a count of attempting to kill Sacramento County Deputy Scott Brown during the Oct. 24 shooting spree.

    Brown was the partner of slain Deputy Danny Oliver. Placer County Sheriff's Detective Michael Davis Jr. was killed hours later.

    Bracamontes' wife, Janelle Marquez Monroy, also is charged in the case but does not face the death penalty. Prosecutors allege her husband fired the fatal shots.

    Her attorney, Peter Kmeto, declined comment after a separate hearing. The pair is scheduled to return to court Feb. 4.

    Neither has entered pleas to multiple charges of murder, attempted murder, carjacking and attempted carjacking. They also face counts involving weapons violations.

    The couple appeared to be living quietly in the Salt Lake City area until their arrest in California.

    Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones released a YouTube video last month chastising President Barack Obama and Congress for their lack of progress on illegal immigration, a problem Jones linked to Bracamontes because the Mexican national has a long criminal history and was in the U.S. illegally.

    Jones said Bracamontes had been deported four times before he was charged with killing the two deputies.

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/d...uties-27480644

  2. #12
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    Public defenders ask to ban media from Sacramento hearing in slain deputies case

    The public defenders who are representing the man accused of shooting and killing two local sheriff’s deputies four months ago have filed a motion to keep the press out of a court hearing on the case.

    Sacramento County Assistant Public Defenders Norm Dawson and Jeff Barbour filed the motion last week. A hearing on the case has been scheduled for Wednesday for their client, Luis Enriquez Monroy Bracamontes, and co-defendant Janelle Marquez Monroy.

    “Counsel for Mr. Bracamontes believe that because of publicity, it will be extremely difficult, if not impossible to select a fair and impartial jury and to afford Mr. Bracamontes his rights to a fair preliminary hearing, due process and impartial trial. Publicizing this matter further at this court appearance will continue to add to that difficulty.”

    Bracamontes, 34, and Monroy, 38, are scheduled to make a routine appearance Wednesday in front of Sacramento Superior Court Judge Steve White, to whom the case has been pre-assigned.

    They are accused in the Oct. 24 shooting deaths of Sacramento County sheriff’s deputy Daniel Oliver, 47, and Placer County sheriff’s deputy Michael Davis Jr., 42. Oliver was gunned down behind a Motel 6 on Arden Way in Sacramento. Authorities say Davis was shot and killed when he and another deputy confronted Bracamontes and Monroy later on a road in Auburn.

    The defense attorneys also filed a motion to exclude the electronic media from a Dec. 9 hearing in Sacramento Superior Court. The motion was denied, although television camera operators were barred from taking pictures of the defendants’ faces.

    Bracamontes is facing the death penalty in the case.

    http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/cri...#storylink=cpy
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  3. #13
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    Man accused of murdering two deputies in Sacramento-area rampage: ‘I killed those cops’

    In a dramatic scene in Sacramento Superior Court, the man accused of killing two deputies in a daylong rampage last October announced Wednesday that he was guilty and defiantly asked to be executed.

    “You don’t have to do any more investigation,” Luis Enriquez Monroy Bracamontes blurted out at the end of what was supposed to be a routine scheduling hearing before Judge Steve White.

    “I’m guilty…,” Bracamontes said. “Execute me whenever you guys are ready…

    “I killed those cops.”

    Bracamontes, a Mexican citizen who had been deported from the United States several times and was in the country illegally at the time of the slayings, made his comments after White had left the bench and as he was being escorted to the rear of the fourth-floor courtroom to be returned to jail.

    His lawyers, Norm Dawson and Jeff Barbour, who have been trying to keep the media out of court in what they say is an effort to ensure him a fair trial, tried unsuccessfully to muzzle him, saying, “Luis, Luis,” as he spoke to about 15 members of the media.

    One woman at the back of the courtroom jumped up and stormed out of the courtroom after saying loudly, “Shut up, asshole.”

    Outside, she described herself as being from a “law enforcement family” but would not give her name.

    Bracamontes is facing the death penalty for the Oct. 24 slayings of Sacramento sheriff’s Deputy Danny Oliver and Placer County sheriff’s Deputy Michael Davis during a rampage that began near Arden Fair mall and ended outside Auburn.

    The suspect faces the death penalty if convicted in the case, and his wife, Janelle Marquez Monroy, faces life in prison as an alleged accomplice.

    Both suspects appeared in court Wednesday morning for what was expected to be another routine hearing in a case that could be lengthy.

    But Bracamontes signaled from the start that the hearing might be eventful.

    As he walked in wearing red jail clothing and shackled at his waist, he appeared to have a bounce in his step and made a nod toward Sacramento Deputy District Attorney Rod Norgaard.

    Then, he looked at the gathered media and asked, “How are you guys doing?”

    He remained quiet during the brief session, then made his comments after the hearing had ended and the judge had left.

    http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/cri...le9227444.html


    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  4. #14
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    Accused cop killer cracks jokes in brief court hearing

    By Sam Stanton
    The Sacramento Bee

    Luis Enriquez Monroy Bracamontes may just figure he’s got nothing to lose. At a court hearing in February, the accused cop killer announced to the judge, assembled attorneys and reporters that he had committed the crime.

    “I killed them cops,” he said during the Feb. 4 hearing, then demanded an execution date.

    On Friday, the 34-year-old accused killer of two deputies continued his routine, strolling into Sacramento Superior Court Judge Steve White’s courtroom with a broad grin on his face.

    Handcuffed and escorted by deputies, Bracamontes first announced that he’d like a cup of coffee. When that wasn’t forthcoming, he asked for water, which was provided in a small paper cup from a carafe at the defense table, where he sat with his lawyers and his wife, co-defendant Janelle Monroy.

    Like the February hearing, during which he appeared to be enjoying himself so much that he bounced on his feet, Bracamontes ignored the typical legal niceties of the courtroom on Friday.

    When White scheduled the next hearing in the case for May 29, Bracamontes announced that he couldn’t make it. “I’m busy,” he said.

    During the entire hearing, Bracamontes smiled and looked around at the courtroom audience and reporters seated in the jury box. His 38-year-old wife did not speak during the hearing, which lasted only a few minutes, and the judge and lawyers in the case appeared largely to ignore Bracamontes.

    Neither suspect has yet entered a plea in the killings of sheriff’s deputies Danny Oliver and Michael Davis Jr. during a daylong shooting spree on Oct. 24 that began in Sacramento and ended in Auburn.

    Bracamontes faces the death penalty and is charged with counts of first-degree murder with five special circumstance allegations, killing law enforcement officers, committing multiple murders, murder to avoid arrest and murder during a carjacking or attempted carjacking.

    His wife, who is charged with two counts of murder and 13 other felony counts, faces up to life in prison.

    So far, Bracamontes has been allowed to speak out without restraint, but one veteran Sacramento attorney said he doubts that such forbearance will continue.

    “Steve White is a really superb trial judge,” said defense attorney Don Heller, who is not connected to the case but whose son is a deputy with the Sacramento Sheriff’s Department, where Oliver served. “He’s going to give him a little bit of leash, and then he’s going to reel him in.”

    Outbursts from defendants are not all that rare, Heller noted, adding that he has seen them both as a prosecutor and defense attorney.

    Heller said he prosecuted a rape case in New York in which the defendant had to be repeatedly gagged and bound because of his outbursts, which began when he overturned the defense table. Heller also prosecuted would-be presidential assassin Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme in federal court in Sacramento.

    Fromme, who pointed a pistol at then-President Gerald R. Ford in Capitol Park in 1975, posed so many difficulties during trial that she ended up in a cell behind the courtroom listening to the proceedings on a speaker for most of the case.

    Some clients pose problems in court simply because they do not understand the procedures, Heller said.

    “And then you get the conniving type that realize they’re going down, that they committed a very serious crime and they’re trying to delay the inevitable,” he said.

    Other times, defendants play to television and still cameras in courtrooms, although no cameras were allowed into court on Friday.

    Bill Portanova, another prominent Sacramento defense attorney and former prosecutor, said the best way to handle such clients is to act immediately.

    “When a client is prone to outbursts, it’s best to bark them right back down immediately,” Portanova said. “Like a spoiled child, the more rope you give them the more they take advantage...

    “They’re doing themselves a lot of damage. Judges are human beings, judges can only put up with so much disrespect in their courtrooms.”

    http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/cri...#storylink=cpy

  5. #15
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    Sacramento court case for alleged deputy killers pushed to September

    Luis Bracamontes and wife are accused in October crime spree that killed two area deputies

    By Sam Stanton
    The Sacramento Bee

    Court hearings for accused cop killer Luis Enriquez Monroy Bracamontes and his wife have been moved again, this time to September, but with a warning from the judge that he wants the case moving forward soon.

    In a brief hearing before Sacramento Superior Court Judge Steve White, the case was set for a status conference at 9 a.m. Sept. 4. White said he wanted to be able to schedule a preliminary hearing at that conference unless new developments require a further postponement.

    Bracamontes, 34, and his wife, Janelle Monroy, 38, are accused in an October crime spree that stretched from Sacramento to Auburn and killed Sacramento County sheriff’s Deputy Danny Oliver and Placer County sheriff’s Deputy Michael Davis Jr.

    Bracamontes, a Mexican citizen who was in this country illegally at the time of the crime spree, faces the death penalty if convicted in the case; his wife faces up to life in prison.

    http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/cri...e22606671.html


    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  6. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by Moh View Post
    “I killed them cops,” he said during the Feb. 4 hearing, then demanded an execution date.
    So wheres the problem - give him a date in a few weeks.. Save the public some money.

  7. #17
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    Mental exam ordered for accused killer of deputies in Sacramento, Placer counties

    A judge agreed to suspend proceedings Friday in the case against accused cop killer Luis Monroy Bracamontes while the suspect is evaluated by medical experts to determine whether he is mentally competent to stand trial.

    Sacramento Superior Court Judge Steve White ordered the appointment of two specialists to examine Bracamontes and report back by Sept. 4 on his mental state.

    Bracamontes’ public defenders, Jeffrey Barbour and Norman Dawson, requested the move in a court filing June 30 that said they had met with him regularly for eight months and wanted an evaluation.

    If the doctors find Bracamontes competent, he will face trial in the October slayings of Sacramento County sheriff’s Deputy Danny Oliver and Placer County sheriff’s Deputy Michael Davis Jr.

    Bracamontes faces the death penalty if convicted in the case. If he is found mentally incompetent, he can be held at a state hospital until he is found able to stand trial.

    His wife, Jannelle Monroy, 38, is a co-defendant in the case and faces up to life in prison.

    http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/article29657455.html

    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  8. #18
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    Sacramento judge keeps mental competency hearing open for suspect in deputy killings

    By Sam Stanton
    The Sacramento Bee

    A Sacramento judge on Friday rejected a request to close the mental competency hearing for Luis Monroy Bracamontes, accused of killing two deputies, saying the public’s right to information in the case outweighs defense attorneys’ concerns over the publicity the case is generating.

    Superior Court Judge Steve White rejected a motion from public defenders Jeffrey Barbour and Norman Dawson and paved the way for a public hearing to begin Nov. 20 that will determine whether Bracamontes can stand trial in the slayings – which could earn him the death penalty – or whether he must be confined to a state hospital until he is found competent to face trial.

    Bracamontes is accused of killing Sacramento Deputy Danny Oliver and Placer Deputy Michael Davis Jr. in October 2014 in a daylong outbreak of gun violence that paralyzed the region.

    His lawyers, who have sought previously to exclude the media from hearings in the case, argued that their client cannot receive a fair trial if media coverage of his mental competency hearing is allowed.

    “The amount of publicity in the Sacramento area on this case has been overwhelming,” Barbour and Dawson wrote in their motion. “In the age of modern technology, events are broadcast in real time.

    “There was significant publicity on this case as it happened. The police hunt for the suspects was broadcast on radio and television. Many schools were on lockdown. Once an arrest was made, the story remained the dominant local news story.”

    Placer County Deputy District Attorney David Tellman, who is prosecuting the case with Sacramento Assistant Chief Deputy District Attorney Rod Norgaard, told White that family members of victims in the case had expressed interest in attending the competency proceedings.

    “We have had some interest from the victims’ families requesting permission to watch some of those hearings,” Tellman said.

    Stephen Burns, an attorney representing The Sacramento Bee, appeared in court prepared to argue against the exclusion of media and the public, but White signaled before Burns spoke that he was prepared to reject the defense request.

    Bracamontes, who sat at the defense table while being watched over by seven deputies, did not speak during the hearing.

    The Bracamontes case already has been conducted with a certain amount of control over media coverage.

    White has declined to allow cameras in his courtroom, and previous hearings were conducted with photographers ordered to not record images of the suspect’s face, despite the fact that mug shots and Facebook photos of Bracamontes are widely available.

    The suspect already has blurted out in court that he is guilty and wants to be executed, andin July, White ordered a hearing to determine whether Bracamontes is mentally competent to stand trial after his attorneys raised concerns about his mental capacity.

    His attorneys argued “privileged and confidential information” that could come out in the hearing should not be available to the public because it would “compound what may already be an insurmountable task – picking a fair and impartial jury and seeking to ensure a fair and impartial trial.”

    But White noted that if Bracamontes is found not competent he likely will be held in a state hospital for a lengthy period of time, which would reduce the public’s memory of what comes out of the hearing. If he is found competent and a trial moves forward, White noted, the defense always has the right to seek a change of venue.

    Bracamontes, 35, faces charges in the case along with his wife, Janelle Monroy, 39, who allegedly accompanied him on the crime spree that began in a Motel 6 parking lot near Arden Fair mall and ended in Auburn.

    http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/article43467840.html


    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

  9. #19
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    Suspect in California deputies' slayings ruled fit for trial

    A judge says a man charged with killing two Northern California sheriff's deputies during a daylong rampage is competent to stand trial.

    The Sacramento Bee reports (http://bit.ly/1OnvQ2F) that Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Steve White ruled Friday that Luis Bracamontes is mentally fit to assist in his own defense.

    Prosecutors in Sacramento and Placer counties are seeking the death penalty if the 35-year-old is convicted in the slayings of deputies Danny Oliver and Michael Davis Jr. in October 2014.

    Defense attorneys sought the mental health evaluation, and experts disagreed over whether he is competent.

    White set a March 28 preliminary hearing for Bracamontes, who was in the country illegally.

    His wife, 39-year-old Janelle Monroy, faces life in prison if she is convicted. She pleaded not guilty to numerous charges Friday.

    http://www.theeagle.com/news/nation/...7960200e0.html
    An uninformed opponent is a dangerous opponent.

    "Y'all be makin shit up" ~ Markeith Loyd

  10. #20
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    Last desperate efforts to save wounded Placer deputy recalled in emotional court session

    By Sam Stanton
    The Sacramento Bee

    Placer County sheriff’s Detective Mike Simmons was the first one to reach his partner, who lay face down on the ground in the Auburn cul de sac where Riverview Drive ends.

    After driving into an ambush, Detective Mike Davis wasn’t moving, and his colleagues were desperate to save him.

    One officer, Sacramento County Deputy Danny Oliver, already was dead from the rampage of violence that broke out about 10:25 a.m. on Oct. 24, 2014. Placer County officers were swarming the Auburn neighborhood where they believed Oliver’s killer might be hiding that afternoon.

    Davis, who was doing paperwork in his office when he heard radio traffic about the hunt, raced to the scene in his unmarked Dodge Charger and got out of the car to look for the suspected shooter. Suddenly, he went down, and Simmons and other officers began a frantic effort that was described in chilling detail Tuesday in a Sacramento courtroom for the first time.

    The testimony came in the second day of a preliminary hearing for Luis Monroy Bracamontes, who is accused of killing the deputies, and the witnesses who took the stand in Judge Steve White’s courtroom described the chaos of the moments after Davis was shot.

    Sacramento police Detective Patrick Higgins, one of many area investigators brought in to help handle the case, recounted what Placer sheriff's deputies told him about the ambush that killed Davis.

    It began when three deputies spotted the red Ford F-150 pickup truck the suspect was believed to have stolen in Sacramento after Oliver was shot. The deputies moved in, sparking a gunbattle that left patrol cars riddled with bullets and the deputies seeking shelter as they checked each other for bullet wounds, Higgins said.

    During that shootout, authorities believe Bracamontes jumped into an idling patrol car and drove off, eventually abandoning it at the end of the cul de sac and running off.

    Deputies, led by Davis, gave chase.

    They drove into the cul de sac, where sight lines are obscured by heavy foliage, and immediately began taking fire. “Shot fired, shots fired, I’m hit, I’m hit,” one deputy told Higgins he heard over radio traffic.

    Another deputy, Jeffrey Davis, who would end up wounded, sent out an urgent message that “he was under heavy fire,” Higgins testified.

    Mike Davis got out of his car in the cul de sac and began to look around for the gunman when shots rang out again.

    Jeffrey Davis saw Mike Davis kneeling down and yelled at him, “Hey, he’s right there, he’s right there,” trying to warn the detective of where the gunman was hidden.

    Jeffrey Davis looked again at Mike Davis and saw him flat on the ground, Higgins testified, then opened fire at the suspect.

    “He wanted to continue firing, and he looked down and saw that his hand was bloody,” Higgins said.

    Higgins said that Detective Simmons, who had worked with Mike Davis for years, described rushing over to help.

    “Mike was face down with both his hands underneath,” Higgins said of what Simmons told him.

    Appearing to choke with emotion, Higgins added, “He said he rolled him over, and blood was gushing out of his mouth and nose.”

    The deputies pulled Mike Davis into his car and sped away to a safe spot “and tried to save his life,” Higgins said.

    Deputies stripped off Davis’ gear and Simmons found what he described to Higgins as a “rather unassuming-looking wound to his shoulder.”

    But Simmons already feared his partner had no chance.

    “He said he knew he was dead,” Higgins said. “He said they were doing CPR and they kept trying to clear his airway and more blood kept coming up.”

    Desperate, deputies at the scene loaded Davis onto the hood of the car. Sgt. Bill Walton continued CPR while Simmons got into the car to try to drive toward help. Detective Chris Joyce, who was at the scene and testified Tuesday, said he held onto Davis’ legs and ran alongside until he could no longer keep up.

    They rushed Davis toward a fire station and contacted the California Highway Patrol for a helicopter evacuation, but decided against it because it meant they would have to halt their life-saving CPR efforts.

    It was too late. Davis died from the shot.

    Now, Bracamontes faces the possibility of the death penalty if convicted in the rampage; his wife, who was arrested after being ordered out of the red pickup truck by Joyce and other deputies, faces life.

    Both suspects have been in custody since the shootings and appeared in White’s fourth-floor courtroom Tuesday for the second day of a hearing to determine whether there is enough evidence to order them to trial.

    Monroy sat quietly and impassively for both days of the hearing, as she has in past court appearances.

    Her husband’s demeanor, which has included loud confessions, strange jokes and bouts of staring at courtroom spectators, remained consistent with his past appearances.

    “You’re all pretending to be what you are not,” Bracamontes announced at one point as attorneys and courtroom staff prepared for the start of the hearing. “I’m just saying the truth, nothing but the truth.”

    Bracamontes smiled and stared intently at prosecutors Rod Norgaard and David Tellman.

    “You’re not helping our cause here, you’re really not,” defense attorney Norm Dawson told his client at one point before Judge White entered and the hearing began.

    Dawson and co-defense attorney Jeffrey Barbour have argued that their client is too mentally ill to face trial and are pursuing their effort before the state Supreme Court. White on Monday rejected their request to delay the hearing until they can pursue their appeal.

    At times during the Monday and Tuesday hearings, Bracamontes appeared to enjoy what he was hearing, especially during discussion of the gun battles.

    Bracamontes, with two stone-faced deputies sitting directly behind the chair where he sits with one hand cuffed to it, smiled broadly at times. At others, he wore a smug expression.

    After Tuesday’s lunch break, Judge White took a moment to warn the suspect about his facial expressions and staring, telling him that he has the right to watch witnesses but cannot make faces or take other actions that could be construed as sending some sort of message.

    “You must not do that,” White said.

    “I’m not doing faces to no one,” Bracamontes replied, then agreed to the judge’s request.

    For the rest of the hearing, which is expected to conclude Wednesday, he complied.

    http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/cri...e68791017.html
    "I realize this may sound harsh, but as a father and former lawman, I really don't care if it's by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions."
    - Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian

    "There are some people who just do not deserve to live,"
    - Rev. Richard Hawke

    “There are lots of extremely smug and self-satisfied people in what would be deemed lower down in society, who also deserve to be pulled up. In a proper free society, you should be allowed to make jokes about absolutely anything.”
    - Rowan Atkinson

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